In life, you must choose your regrets.
“You'll regret it if you get married. You'll regret it if you don't get married. You'll regret it if you have kids, and you'll regret it if you don't.
Kierkegaard said this 200 years ago as follows:
‘Whatever you choose, you'll regret it. Because the problem isn't in your choices; it's in romanticizing a life you haven't lived.
A person always finds an untraveled path alluring and mysterious.
That's why the issue isn't making the right choice.
It's choosing and deciding which regret you'll live with.’
What have you decided?” — Salih Guney
My favorite line from Atomic Habits has been living in my head rent-free:
“It doesn’t make sense to continue wanting something if you’re not willing to do what it takes to get it. If you don’t want to live the lifestyle, then release yourself from the desire. To crave the result but not the process is to guarantee disappointment.”
@BlueCollarInvr And yes, run the contract language through AI and ask it was it means and what it actually covers. That will help interpret the insurance you purchased and what it actually covers.
@BlueCollarInvr I’m in insurance and deal with this all the time. Unless the lift was new, you owe them ACV - actual cash value. Have them provide you information on the lift. When was it purchased, etc. Assuming it was used and several years old, you’re probably looking at much less.